Well done for tracking down the broadcast! 1975 would fit in with my somewhat vague memory....but I do remember the sound which was just right...not over-refined, but just right for Britten.
Dr Arthur Wills OBE (1926-2020)
Collapse
X
-
Arthur Wills was indeed a 'serious' composer. During my four years as his assistant (1968-72), I was present at a number of first performances, organ and choral, and indeed copied some of them out to send publishers a manuscript that was readable! He was a great man in every sense, great fun to be with, and I learnt much from him, some how to do things, and some how not to! Ardcarp referred to the boys as not being over-refined. You could say that of the choir as a whole at that time. The lay clerks were a gloriously disparate group ... in my less-charitable moments I would describe them as the Ely rude mechanicals, but their collective sound was seldom less than exciting, and often very musical and moving. Mention of Britten reminds me that he and Peter Pears came to an evensong one day. The hope was that BB would write something for either the whole choir or the boys. Sadly, his heart problem grew acute just after the visit, and the idea came to nought. In Arthur's passing a notable influence in my musical life has gone, and I give thanks that I had that time working with and for him. RIP.
RJ
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostYes, he was one of the (very competent) O&Cs who was also a serious composer...in the sense of taking the process seriously. I remember hearing a live [?] broadcast of Britten's Ceremony of Carols with Ely trebles in AW's day, and it had the expressive freedom of tone that BB would have approved of.
Sad to hear of his passing.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Roger Judd View PostArthur Wills was indeed a 'serious' composer. During my four years as his assistant (1968-72), I was present at a number of first performances, organ and choral, and indeed copied some of them out to send publishers a manuscript that was readable! He was a great man in every sense, great fun to be with, and I learnt much from him, some how to do things, and some how not to! Ardcarp referred to the boys as not being over-refined. You could say that of the choir as a whole at that time. The lay clerks were a gloriously disparate group ... in my less-charitable moments I would describe them as the Ely rude mechanicals, but their collective sound was seldom less than exciting, and often very musical and moving. Mention of Britten reminds me that he and Peter Pears came to an evensong one day. The hope was that BB would write something for either the whole choir or the boys. Sadly, his heart problem grew acute just after the visit, and the idea came to nought. In Arthur's passing a notable influence in my musical life has gone, and I give thanks that I had that time working with and for him. RIP.
RJ
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cjsb View PostVery sorry to hear this news. I moved up to mid-Suffolk in 1976 and soon discovered Ely Cathedral - I remember attending many evensongs directed by Dr Wills over the next fourteen years. In the eighties there was a documentary made by Anglia TV about the choir and it is now on the Archive of Recorded Church Music's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1xg7pYPx9s
Comment
-
-
Ceremony of Carols
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMy memory is a bit dodgy, Q, but I'm certain AW did Britten's Ceremony of Carols at some time in the past...more like the late 60s. A friend's son was an Ely chorister at the time...so it's possible I even attended it live. But I do seem to remember a broadcast.....
Comment
-
-
People may be interested to know that, in common with all services at the moment, Arthur's Requiem Eucharist is being live-streamed on YouTube at 14:30 on Monday 23rd November. It will be an enormous honour to be one of those singing for it. I daresay there will be a further memorial service at some point when the restrictions have been lifted.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by bach736 View PostGraham Creelman's 1986 film was very much 'of its time' as were some of the very unreconstructed opinions expressed in it. Btw, who was the Decani songman at the Easter service with the magnificent eyebrows?
Comment
-
-
A little tribute to AWW on this morning's R3 Breakfast with Petroc: The City of Ely March from his Fenlands Suite for Organ and Brass Band; very Waltonesque. I remember his telling me at the time he'd toyed with the idea of calling it Fenlandia (sic).
Petroc said his Torygraph obit. is in today's edition, but I think he's about a fortnight out.Last edited by Finzi4ever; 19-11-20, 09:10.
Comment
-
Comment